I work on many projects that run on Express servers, whether they are front-end (i.e. React.js) codebases or server-side Node.js
codebases
.
Many times with the front-end codebases
I would load conditional configuration based on NODE_ENV
, such as the URL of the restful API that the front-end makes requests to.
I many times also used NODE_ENV to conditionally load things like DB configuration for server-side Node.js
projects.
On a project that consisted of development, staging, and production (3 environments), I would usually set up my code to load configuration based on the NODE_ENV
being set to any one of those 3 environments (and maybe also "local").
I was recently working on a project that was referring to the production environment as "live."
When I decided to set the NODE_ENV=live for this environment, a coworker pointed out a major flaw with this approach.
It seems that Express and some other libraries for Node.js latch onto the fact that you will either be using "production" or "development" as your NODE_ENV
and using other names for your environments can have unexpected effects.
For example, Express needs NODE_ENV=production
in order to run in "production" mode. According to the Express docs "Tests indicate that just doing this can improve app performance by a factor of three!"
Basically, I'm curious if it is considered common practice to set the NODE_ENV
to values other than "development" and "production," like I've been doing in my projects.
I feel that if I'm going to deploy my code to the development or staging environments on the cloud, I don't think they should run in a different Express "mode" than the production environment.
Does it make more sense to maintain configurations separate from NODE_ENV
?
For example, does it make sense to base your configuration off of a variable like APP_ENV
, while ensuring that NODE_ENV
is either "development" or "production" for frameworks/packages
like Express.
NODE_CONFIG_ENV
stackoverflow.com/a/58337435/2963579